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Tuesday, 30 December 2014

We arrived almost 6
hours behind schedule, that was my last direct experience of Nigeria after our
flight to London Heathrow was delayed for just about the length of time it
would have taken for our flight to be entering the French airspace and for each
hour of delay no one could clearly state when we were going to depart.

The Murtala
Muhammed International Airport was probably a different place, and Nigeria Airways was probably
one of the safest airlines in the world, though from the vantage point of my
residence; just a wall separated us from the runway in Shasha-Akowonjo, Lagos
we could very well have our finger on the pulse of the country.

A lull in air
traffic almost definitely meant there was a military putsch in process, whether
it would fail or succeed was another thing. At other times that would bring
water to one’s eyes, there was nights of power cuts to the airport, that then
was redolent of the systemic malfunctioning environment that Nigeria had
become.

Factored in the end

In my somewhat
successful professional life as a company director, a desktop publishing expert
and trainer, it was rent seekers who always thought they deserved a share of my
invoices even though they were well paid for doing their jobs.

A few days before
my departure, I was sat in a police station for almost 6 hours trying to get my
staff out on bail because my bumbling business partner felt he had the power to
wield with impunity whilst lacking the courtesy to inform me of why my staff
had been corralled with others on the false accusation of theft.

When I finally
gained the release of my staff, I had parted with 500 Naira and signed a legal
document that said nothing of the sort had happened.

A changed Nigeria

The promise of
Nigeria of my youth was no longer looking like the dreams we once had, it had
become nightmarish and ghoulish, a caricature of itself as it was being
mismanaged by yet another military junta that once appeared to be a salvation
to Nigerians but was in fact the demise of everything that was good and lovely
of our dear motherland.

Other little things
I could handle, the lack of attention to detail, poor timekeeping, sometimes
supercilious buffoons who had come into money and power, not to talk of the
pretences that were exhibited in hedonism and ostentation, but that is
typically Nigerian.

An alien to many

However, one thing
always stood out in my almost 19 year Nigerian experience, I was never really
accepted as one of the many, even though my accent which had a West Midlands
sound had softened to a non-descript mishmash of experiences in England and
Northern Nigeria, it still betrayed an otherness that people immediately picked
up on and used to either castigate or excuse me.

To many, even close
relations, I was always going to be the boy born abroad, no matter how adapted
to Nigeria I was, though on the matter of integration, there were just some
customs I was never going to absorb.

Maybe we had a
brashness, a boldness, a precociousness, a forwardness, a sometimes lack of
reverence, definitely an absence of obsequiousness and much else that annoyed a
few as it won recognition from others, something set us apart.

Honesty still the best policy

Having visited
England just over a month before after an interesting visa interview that left
the consulate officer quite surprised that I was not driven to abscond, but
return to what I enjoyed doing in Nigeria, our discussion became one of sharing
experiences of the penchant of certain Nigerians to lie at interviews and lie
again to cover other lies that the interviewer is literally embarrassed for
both the Nigerian and themselves.

Yet, it was an
eye-opener that showed that there was a place where I could belong, feel at
ease and even thrive without the inconveniences that were the Nigerian
narrative.

When I returned to
the embassy a month later, it was a breeze to get the Entitlement
to the Right of Abode because the queue for getting a British passport in
Nigeria was a good 18 months long - I had no time for that.

Disillusioned at home

However, this
amongst many other things became how along with many of my generation, we left
Nigeria disillusioned young people to build our lives elsewhere - the sad thing
is that of the many that left, probably most have never returned.

That was 24 years
ago today for me, but it has not diminished my desire for Nigeria to be a
better place, to be better run, for the people to have better opportunities and
a great pride in a Nigeria we once knew worked, in a fashion.

Long live Nigeria
and may it be liberated from the grip of an unconscionable kakistocracy that
has no desire for a great future beyond what it does for their bellies.